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Dr. Jon LaPook

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Body Language: Knowing Your Parts

Posted: 10/08/09 02:21 PM ET

Several years ago I was urgently paged by a patient who had discovered a lump at the bottom of his chest. He came straight over to my office, fairly certain he had cancer. The lump turned out to be a normal part of his sternum (breastbone), a small piece of cartilage called the xiphoid. Now that's the kind of diagnosis I like to make.

I'm guessing most people don't know where their xiphoid is and, fortunately, it doesn't come up much in conversation. But there are a few parts of the body you should be familiar with in order to recognize important symptoms and alert your doctor. Here's my top-four list of organs whose location patients should know but often don't:

Appendix
The appendix is a wormlike structure in the right (from the patient's point of view) lower quadrant of the abdomen, at the very beginning of the colon -- near the junction of the large intestine (colon) and small intestine. The word "itis" means inflammation; so appendicitis means inflammation of the appendix. Appendicitis can cause pain and all sorts of vague gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, indigestion, and lack of appetite.

Where is the appendix? Place your left index finger on your umbilicus (that's med-speak for navel or belly button) and your right index finger on the curved bone (iliac crest) at the top of your right hip. The appendix is usually about a third of the way from your right index finger to your left index finger. But the location can vary considerably and the classic presentation of pain around the navel that migrates down to the right lower quadrant only occurs about half the time. Depending on how the appendix is pointed, the pain can appear in all sorts of places -- even in the right upper quadrant.

Clinical pearl: the appendix is on the right, not the left.

Gallbladder
The gallbladder is a small sac that stores bile in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen, nestled under the right ribcage. When the gallbladder contracts, it squirts bile down a duct and into the small intestines, where it helps digest food. Sometimes the bile precipitates into stones or sand-like sludge inside the gallbladder, often causing no symptoms. But if a stone blocks the thin tube (cystic duct) where the bile exits the gallbladder, the gallbladder can become inflamed and painful. The classic symptom of an inflamed gallbladder (cholecystitis) is sharp right upper quadrant pain that may radiate to the right shoulder or right back. There may also be nausea and vomiting.

Atypical symptoms include pain in the upper midline (epigastrium) or even chest.

Clinical pearl: if a stone leaves the gallbladder and gets stuck in the duct (common bile duct) that leads to the small intestine, it can block the flow of bile out of the liver and cause jaundice (yellow discoloration of the skin and whites of the eyes).

Pancreas
The pancreas organ secretes digestive enzymes and hormones and is located behind the upper left and upper middle parts of the abdominal cavity -- in back of the stomach and in front of the spine. Pancreatitis can cause extreme pain that may bore through to the back. A common cause is "gallstone pancreatitis" -- occurring when tiny gallstones, sand, or sludge leave the gallbladder, travel down a duct (common bile duct) and disrupt the normal flow of digestive enzymes as they flow from the pancreas into the small intestines. The pancreatic juices back up into the pancreas and cause inflammation. Other causes of pancreatitis include alcohol, medication, infection, and trauma.

Clinical pearl: If you develop pancreatitis from gallstones, the gallbladder usually has to be removed in order to prevent another episode.

The Kidneys
When we were first year medical students, one of my best friends thought that the kidneys were in the pelvis. Makes sense. But wrong. They're actually fist-sized organs in the mid-upper back towards the side (the flanks). My friend became a superb psychiatrist and can tell you exactly where the superego is located. Kidney stones or infection can cause flank or abdominal pain and a variety of other symptoms, including nausea, pain on urination, or blood in the urine.

Clinical pearl: With vitamin D supplementation becoming increasingly prevalent, don't make the mistake of taking more vitamin D than your doctor recommends. Too much can cause kidney stones.

For today's CBS Doc Dot Com, I ask an international sampling of Central Park strollers to locate various body parts. Click below to see their
responses:


Watch CBS News Videos Online

 
 
 
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12:52 AM on 10/09/2009
Anyone who's taken a CPR course should know where the xyphoid process is... Thanks for the gallbladder-pancreas explanation!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tc2598
09:45 PM on 10/08/2009
You guys, he wasn't talking about medicine. He was talking about men following their reproductive organs around, and people like me talking out my butt.

But on a more medical note, my daughter got her appendix out a couple of weeks ago. Had a stomach ache in the morning, was in surgery by midnight. We know where it is now!
06:50 PM on 10/08/2009
I can't tell you how fascinated I was by your explanation of pancreatitis. In 1995 I was hospitalized with pancreatitis for four days. When I was released I had to follow up with my doctor. Both the doctors in the hospital, and my own doctor insisted it was caused by alcohol. I hadn't had any. They finally agreed with a sigh "whatever small amount you had, might have just been too much for you." I eventually agreed, even though, again, I hadn't had any.

For almost two years afterwards I suffered attack after attack of pancretitis. I lost a job over it. There were times I crawled on the floor to the telephone to call in sick, literally.

Never once did any doctor ever mention your galbladder explanation. Amazing. I must have needed my gallbladder removed. All of that anguish.

I haven't had an attack in years, but this is still good to know - as an explanation for what is past, and as knowledge, just in case, in the future.
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DrLaPook
Medical Correspondent, CBS Evening News with Scott
09:52 PM on 10/08/2009
Since gallstone pancreatitis can recur - even years after the last attack - I suggest that you discuss your history with your doctor and decide whether further evaluation is indicated now.
Best,
Jon
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vim876
04:19 PM on 10/08/2009
Careful with location; everyone is different. When I got my appendix out, the doctors discovered it was actually in the middle, not the right.
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DrLaPook
Medical Correspondent, CBS Evening News with Scott
06:20 PM on 10/08/2009
Absolutely! Often a person's body doesn't read the medical textbooks!
Jon
04:09 PM on 10/08/2009
>There are a few parts of the body you should be familiar with in order to ..

Jon, most adults only suffer from two major sources of body part confusion.

Men will sometimes think with the wrong head.

All of us, on occasion, suffer rectal-cranial inversion. Particularly when posting on HP.

As long as readers can identify these four parts, and return them to their proper locations when they get out of balance, they'll be fine.
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drvittoriarepetto
04:43 PM on 10/08/2009
One of the more common mistakes that I have found in my practice are patients saying that they have stomach pains and then when I ask them to point to the pain; the vast majority of them point to their small intestines.
So my rule is: have the patient point to where they are feeling the pain.
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DrLaPook
Medical Correspondent, CBS Evening News with Scott
05:46 PM on 10/08/2009
Very true. Most people use the word "stomach" to mean "abdomen." For those non-doctors out there, the stomach is really only the sack that lies between the esophagus (swallowing tube) and first part of small intestines (duodenum) and helps mix and digest food.

Jon